Week 3-4 - Lesson 2 - Basic Ideas of Finance
Week 3-4 - Lesson 2 - Basic Ideas of Finance
Personal Finance
Basic Ideas of Finance
Learning Objective:
Introduction
Personal finance addresses the “great difficulty” of getting a little money. It is about learning to manage
income and wealth to satisfy desires in life or to create more income and more wealth. It is about creating
productive assets that can be used to create future economic benefit, such as increasing income,
decreasing expenses, or storing wealth, as an investment. In other words, personal finance is about
learning how to get what you want and how to protect what you’ve got.
There is no trick to managing personal finances. Making good financial decisions is largely a matter of
understanding how the economy works, how money flows through it, and how people make financial
decisions. The better your understandings, the better your ability to plan, takes advantage of opportunities,
and avoid disappointments.
The two fundamental ways of earning income in a market-based economy are by selling labor or selling
capital. Selling labor means working, either for someone else or for you. Income comes in the form of a
paycheck. Total compensation may include other benefits, such as retirement contributions, health
insurance, or life insurance. Labor is sold in the labor market.
Selling capital means investing: taking excess cash and selling it or renting it to someone who needs
liquidity (access to cash). Lending is renting out capital; the interest is the rent. You can lend privately by
direct arrangement with a borrower, or you can lend through a public debt exchange by buying corporate,
government, or government agency bonds. Investing in or buying corporate stock is an example of selling
capital in exchange for a share of the company’s future value.
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When income is less than expenses, you have a budget deficit too little cash to provide for your wants or
needs. A budget deficit is not sustainable; it is not financially viable. The only choices are to eliminate the
deficit by (1) increasing income, (2) reducing expenses, or (3) borrowing to make up the difference.
Borrowing may seem like the easiest and quickest solution, but borrowing also increases expenses,
because it creates an additional expense: interest. Unless income can also be increased, borrowing to
cover a deficit will only increase it.
When income for a period is greater than expenses, there is a budget surplus. That situation is
sustainable and remains financially viable. You could choose to decrease income by, say, working less.
More likely, you would use the surplus in one of two ways: consume more or save it. If consumed, the
income is gone, although presumably you enjoyed it.
If saved, however, the income can be stored, perhaps in a piggy bank or cookie jar, and used later. A more
profitable way to save is to invest it in some way—deposit in a bank account, lend it with interest, or trade
it for an asset, such as a stock or a bond or real estate. Those ways of saving are ways of selling your
excess capital in the capital markets to increase your wealth. The following are examples of savings:
Opportunity Cost is the return of a foregone option less than the return on your chosen option.
Considering opportunity costs can guide you to more profitable decision-making. Suppose you can afford
a new jacket or new boots, but not both, because your resources—the incomes you can use to buy
clothing—are limited. If you buy the jacket, you cannot also buy the boots. Not getting the boots is an
opportunity cost of buying the jacket; it is cost of sacrificing your next best choice.
Sunk costs are costs that have already been spent; that is, whatever resources you traded are gone, and
there is no way to recover them. Decisions, by definition, can be made only about the future, not about the
past. A trade, when it’s over, is over and done, so recognizing that sunk can help you make better
decisions.
For example, the money you spent on your jacket is a sunk cost. If it snows next week and you decide you
really do need boots, too, that money is gone, and you cannot use it to buy boots. If you really want the
boots, you will have to find another way to pay for them.
Unlike a price tag, opportunity cost is not obvious. You tend to focus on what you are getting in the trade,
not on what you are not getting. This tendency is a cheerful aspect of human nature, but it can be a
weakness in the kind of strategic decision making that is so essential in financial planning. Human nature
also may make you focus too much on sunk costs, but all the relish or regret in the world cannot change
past decisions. Learning to recognize sunk costs is important in making good financial decisions.
2.2 Assets
An asset is any item with economic value that can be converted to cash. Assets are resources that can be
used to create income or reduce expenses and to store value. Examples of assets are car, saving account,
wind-up toy collection, money market account, shares of stock, forty acres of farmland, and house.
When you sell excess capital in the capital markets in exchange for an asset, it is a way of storing wealth,
and hopefully of generating income as well. The asset is your investment—a use of your liquidity. Some
assets are more liquid than others.
The better investment asset is the one that increases in value—creates a capital gain— during the time
you are storing it.
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Some investors care more about increasing asset value than about income. For example, an investment in
a share of corporate stock may produce a dividend, which is a share of the corporation’s profit, or the
company may keep all its profit rather than pay dividends to shareholders. Reinvesting that profit in the
company may help the company to increase in value. If the company increases in value, the stock
increases in value, increasing investors’ wealth. Further, increases in wealth through capital gains are
taxed differently than income, making capital gains more valuable than an increase in income for some
investors.
On the other hand, other investors care more about receiving income from their investments. For example,
retirees who no longer have employment income may be relying on investments to provide income for
living expenses. Being older and having a shorter horizon, retirees may be less concerned with growing
wealth than with creating income.
Sometimes an asset may be expected to both store wealth and reduce future expenses. For example,
buying a house to live in may be cheaper, in the long run, than renting one. In addition, real estate may
appreciate in value, allowing you to realize a gain when you sell the asset. In this case, the house has
effectively stored wealth. Appreciation in value depends on the real estate market and demand for housing
when the asset is sold, however, so you cannot count on it. Still, a house usually can reduce living
expenses and be a potential store of wealth.
The choice of investment asset, then, depends on your belief in its ability to store and increase wealth,
create income, or reduce expenses. Ideally, your assets will store and increase wealth while increasing
income or reducing expenses. Otherwise, acquiring the asset will not be a productive use of liquidity.
Also, in that case the opportunity cost will be greater than the benefit from the investment, since there are
many assets to choose from.
Borrowing capital has costs, however, so the asset will have to increase wealth, increase earnings, or
decrease expenses enough to compensate for its costs. In other words, the asset will have to be more
productive to earn enough to cover its financing costs—the cost of buying or borrowing capital to buy the
asset.
Buying capital gives you equity, borrowing capital gives you debt, and both kinds of financing have costs
and benefits. When you buy or borrow liquidity or cash, you become a buyer in the capital market.
Borrowing is renting someone else’s money for a period of time, and the result is debt. During that period
of time, rent or interest be paid, which is a cost of debt. When that period of time expires, all the capital
(the principal amount borrowed) must be given back. The investment’s earnings must be enough to cover
the interest, and its growth in value must be enough to return the principal. Thus, debt is a liability, an
obligation for which the borrower is liable.
In contrast, the cost of equity may need to be paid only if there is an increase in income or wealth, and
even then can be deferred. So, from the buyer’s point of view, purchasing liquidity by borrowing (debt)
has a more immediate effect on income and expenses. Interest must be added as an expense, and
repayment must be anticipated.
Debt may also be used to cover a budget deficit, or the excess of expenses over income. As mentioned
previously, however, in the long run the cost of the debt will increase expenses that are already too big,
which is what created the deficit in the first place. Unless income can also be increased, debt can only
aggravate a deficit.
The alternative would be to rent a living space. If the rent on a comparable home were more than the
mortgage interest (which it often is, because a landlord usually wants the rent to cover the mortgage and
create a profit), it would make more sense, if possible, to borrow and buy a home and be able to live in it.
And, extra bedrooms and bathrooms and a yard are valuable while children are young and live at home. If
you wait until you have saved enough to buy a home, you may be much older, and your children may be
off on their own.
Debt creates a cost, but it reduces expenses or increases income to offset that cost. Debt allows this to
happen sooner than it otherwise could, which allows you to realize the maximum benefit for the
investment. In such cases, debt is “worth” it.
since you rely on income to provide for living expenses, you also need to think about protecting your
income. One way to do so is through diversification, or spreading the risk.
Diversification is more often discussed in terms of investment decisions, but diversification of sources of
income works the same way and makes the same kind of sense for the same reasons. If sources of income
are diverse—in number and kind—and one source of income ceases to be productive, then you still have
others to rely on.
If you sell your labor to only one buyer, then you are exposed to more risk than if you can generate
income by selling your labor to more than one buyer. You have only so much time you can devote to
working, however. Having more than one employer could be exhausting and perhaps impossible. Selling
your labor to more than one buyer also means that you are still dependent on the labor market, which
could suffer from an economic cycle such as a recession affecting many buyers (employers).
Mark, for example, works as a school counselor, tutors on the side, paints houses in the summers, and
buys and sells sports memorabilia on the Internet. If he got laid off from his counseling job, he would lose
his paycheck but still be able to create income by tutoring, painting, and trading memorabilia.
Similarly, if you sell your capital to only one buyer—invest in only one asset—then you are exposed to
more risk than if you generate income by investing in a variety of assets. Diversifying investments means
you are dependent on trade in the capital markets, however, which likewise could suffer from unfavorable
economic conditions.
Mark has a checking account, an online money market account, and a balanced portfolio of stocks. If his
stock portfolio lost value, he would still have the value in his money market account.
A better way to diversify sources of income is to sell both labor and capital. Then you are trading in
different markets, and are not totally exposed to risks in either one. In Mark’s case, if all his incomes
dried up, he would still have his investments, and if all his investments lost value, he would still have his
paycheck and other incomes. To diversify to that extent, you need surplus capital to trade. This brings us
full circle to Adam Smith, quoted at the beginning of this chapter, who said, essentially, “It takes money
to make money.”